Documents
-
- Download
- Title pages_Contents_Acknowledgments
- open access
-
- Download
- Chapter 2
- open access
- Full text at publishers site
-
- Download
- References
- open access
-
- Download
- Summary in English
- open access
-
- Download
- Summary in Dutch
- open access
-
- Download
- Summary in Chinese
- open access
-
- Download
- Curriculum Vitae
- open access
-
- Download
- Propositions
- open access
In Collections
This item can be found in the following collections:
Tone and intonation processing: from ambiguous acoustic signal to linguistic representation
The most prominent prosodic feature of tonal languages such as Standard Chinese is their use of pitch to distinguish lexical meanings (i.e., tone). However, speech ambiguity arises in Standard Chinese because the same pitch contour can also cue another linguistic function (i.e., intonation) in the same linguistic system. As most Standard Chinese speakers also speak a local Chinese dialect, speech ambiguity can further arise when the same or similar pitch contours cue the same linguistic function (e.g., tone), but different categories of that function in two linguistic systems of a bi-dialectal speaker. This dissertation investigates how pitch is processed within a linguistic system (i.e., Standard Chinese) and across two linguistic systems (i.e., Standard Chinese and Xi’an Mandarin) when the same pitch contour cues different linguistic functions (i.e., tone and intonation) or different categories of the same linguistic function (i.e., tone).
<...
Show moreThe most prominent prosodic feature of tonal languages such as Standard Chinese is their use of pitch to distinguish lexical meanings (i.e., tone). However, speech ambiguity arises in Standard Chinese because the same pitch contour can also cue another linguistic function (i.e., intonation) in the same linguistic system. As most Standard Chinese speakers also speak a local Chinese dialect, speech ambiguity can further arise when the same or similar pitch contours cue the same linguistic function (e.g., tone), but different categories of that function in two linguistic systems of a bi-dialectal speaker. This dissertation investigates how pitch is processed within a linguistic system (i.e., Standard Chinese) and across two linguistic systems (i.e., Standard Chinese and Xi’an Mandarin) when the same pitch contour cues different linguistic functions (i.e., tone and intonation) or different categories of the same linguistic function (i.e., tone).Show less- All authors
- Liu, M.
- Supervisor
- Schilder, N.O.
- Co-supervisor
- Chen, Y.
- Committee
- Sybesma, R.; Gussenhoven, C.; Levelt, C.; Schriefers, H.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Leiden university centre for linguistics (LUCL), Faculty of Humanities, Leiden University
- Date
- 2018-11-01
- Title of host publication
- LOT dissertation series
- Publisher
- Utrecht: LOT
- ISBN (print)
- 9789460932991
Publication Series
- Name
- 514
Funding
- Sponsorship
- the Chinese Scholarship Council